Mourinho’s negativity doomed Spurs for failure in Leipzig defeat

Alejandro Moreno and Craig Burley lament Jose Mourinho’s excuses following Tottenham’s loss against Leipzig. (1:39)

At Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Wednesday night, we saw a team show glimpses of the old Tottenham Hotspur, the young, vibrant side that thrilled everyone under Mauricio Pochettino and came so close to a couple of improbable title wins.

The problem was, that team was RB Leipzig.

Tottenham will go into the second leg of this Champions League knockout tie with a fighting chance, only 1-0 down when it could have been so much worse. They might try to convince themselves that in the absence of their two most potent attackers, Harry Kane and Son Heung-min, and against an in-form team pushing Bayern Munich for the Bundesliga title, this was a decent result and performance.

In truth though, they were lucky to get away with just that one goal deficit. It could have been three or four in the first 20 minutes alone, when Leipzig had 10 shots to Tottenham’s one, only the German side didn’t take the chances they created. Afterwards, their head coach Julian Nagelsmann expressed mild irritation that the scoreline didn’t reflect Leipzig’s dominance more accurately, the only goal coming from a second-half Timo Werner penalty. “We should have scored more than one,” he said. “Sometimes young teams get frustrated and impatient [when they don’t score immediately].”

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The concern for Tottenham is that this is far from the first time it has happened to them under Jose Mourinho: sooner or later their tactic of ‘hoping the opposition misses all their chances and then we’ll nick one’ was going to backfire. That’s a little reductive perhaps, but it’s not the worst broad summary of how they got victories in their last two Premier League games, against Manchester City and Aston Villa, respectively. Of course, they were significantly hampered by Kane and Son being injured here, but there is some middle ground between that impacting their play and the idea that it was absolutely impossible to compete with Leipzig.

The real objection to this performance was not that Tottenham didn’t create many chances, but that they barely tried to. They lacked any sort of ambition, creativity eschewed in favour of rather hopeful long passes aimed downfield, in the vague hope that one of their makeshift forwards would make something of it. That in itself presents a curious logic: when your attackers aren’t as good as usual, why make it more difficult for them by not trying to create chances?

“We are in a very difficult situation,” said Mourinho, after listing the assorted fitness problems within his squad, as if he was a military leader scrolling through the number of casualties his men had suffered in some bloody battle. “What worries me is this is going to be the situation until the end of the season. The situation is going to be exactly the same, so I’m so, so proud of the players.”

What should be most frustrating is that Tottenham showed they actually could compete in the closing stages, after Tanguy Ndombele and Erik Lamela came on and changed the impetus of the game entirely. Lamela, as Mourinho was extremely keen to make clear afterwards, might not have been 100 percent fit, but those last 20 minutes or so when Tottenham chose to play like a home side rather than a Tony Pulis cypher, was basically Spurs saying “this is how we could have played, but chose not to.”

The words of Mourinho’s captain, goalkeeper Hugo Lloris, indicated that this isn’t just a conclusion reached from the stands. “I want to stay positive, especially after the last 20 minutes. Obviously if we started the game in the same way, the score would be different.”

The truth is that Tottenham, as a club, are entirely to blame for this performance. Firstly, for appointing Mourinho at all, because if they didn’t know they were going to get an approach like this in big games, then they haven’t been paying attention in the last few years — but they did know, they just decided it was worth it if Mourinho would get them winning.

And secondly, for not signing a striker in January, the most obvious consequence being that if Kane and Son are out of action then they’re forced to bodge together an attack, on this occasion starting with Dele Alli and Lucas Moura up front in a sort of 4-4-2 system, presumably with the logic that if you don’t have a striker, you might be able to make one out of two midfielders. This decision to not sign a striker also gives Mourinho licence to play the ‘poor old me’ act, to shrug his shoulders and say there’s really nothing else he could’ve done, whether that’s true or not.

And that was the vibe of his post-match news conference, emphasising not only the injuries that his team have suffered, but how tired his remaining players are. All of which is getting pretty tiresome now, particularly his insistence that he would love to “go to July 1” with all of his squad fit. It’s obvious what he’s doing, presenting the rest of the season as a lost cause so that anything above that makes him look like a genius, but that doesn’t make it any more palatable.

Mourinho rejected the premise of a question that suggested his team had played badly, not only refusing to answer it but picking out the questioner on his way out of the news conference, sarcastically saying “great question, mate.” And some people thought he had changed.

Of course, this tie is a long way from being over. “1-0 is 1-0 it’s not 10-0,” said Mourinho, quite reasonably. “The result is open. It’s as simple as that.”

He’s right, it is open. But if they play like this again in the return, it probably won’t be for long.

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